Finally the brightness breakthrough that OLED TVs need for the middle? LG will test a game-changing generation OLED Tech
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- LG will test a new OLED production method for his TV panels
- Potentially brighter, more efficient OLED TVs with less risk of burning
- Probably appear in niches sectors such as in the car displays first
Some time ago We have reported about a new type of TV technology called ELEAP that the long -term problems with the long -term Best OLED -tvs – and three years since it was announced, it looks like it LG could ultimately bring it into production.
It is known as Eleap, and it is an alternative way of production OLED panels. When it was announced in 2022, the focus was on small telephone screens. But LG -Display looks at the technology for considerably larger displays, and that means that – oh yes – it can be a gigantic eleap for TV technology.
Why ELEEPS could transform TVs
Conventional OLED panels are made with fine metal masks, those thin metal plates are with many small holes in it. Those masks ensure that organic material on the display substrate is trimmed with pixel-perfect precision to ensure that each pixel instructs uniform without overlapping or being poorly aligned.
Eleap does things differently. Instead of fine metal masks, it uses a lithography process to make the OLED pixels. And according to the trade site The ELECLG-Display already has the right equipment to try ELEEP in his OLED facility in Paju, South Korea and want to test it on TV format panels. Samsung Display is reportedly also testing the technology.
This is a test, not the start of production: LG Display and Samsung Display can still decide not to continue with the technology. But it does have the potential to transform OLED production: the promise of ELEAP is that it will offer a much better efficiency for the OLED pixels, because the light-emotional area has more than doubled compared to a pixel of the same size with the help of the Fine MAKK technology.
That means that they are much more energy efficient, so you could have a higher brightness without increasing power consumption – or using less power with the same brightness. This energy efficiency also means less heat generation and heat is an important cause of OLED incalions, so there would be little danger that the higher brightness causes a burning problem.
There is also the potential that ELEAP is more efficient to actually produce, which would mean cheaper OLED panels, which can mean cheaper TVs-at least, perhaps mid-range OLEDs such as the LG C5 can finally become considerably clearer without becoming as expensive as the flagship LG G5.
Even if the tests are successful, however, it is probably some time before we will see the technology in our TVs: according to the ELEC, the use case is in the short term in “niche-oled panels, such as the 20-inch to 30-inch in size or those used in vehicles.” The fact that LG in panels of TV size test is great news for its potential use in the future for Beter Huis Entertainment.
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